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What Medium Says About the Future of Content Marketing

Medium is a social publishing platform created by Twitter co-founders Evan Williams (@ev) and Biz Stone (@biz). It was built to solve a problem:

There’s too much noise.

How can online content consumers separate what matters to them from what doesn’t? Web giants (Google, Facebook and LinkedIn) and startups (Medium) alike are tackling the problem. By doing so, they’re having a powerful impact on how marketers do their jobs. Medium is a poster child for a changing content landscape—and can give us insight into what’s coming next.

Medium’s recommendation rating system echoes Reddit’s front page. And the site’s algorithms and human curators bring to mind some of the content discovery tools out there.

At its most basic, Medium is a way to publish stories. While Williams’s previous company, Blogger, let you own those stories at a unique URL, Medium’s stories all live on the same site.

How Does Medium Work?

Stories are organized into Collections. Posts do not have a date or time and, unlike blogs of the past, are not organized by publish date. You “follow” Collections to populate your reading list with material. Collections are created by Medium and its users.

If you find a post you like, click “Recommend.” This action influences the story’s visibility both within Collections and on Medium’s Top 100 list, a central catalog of the month’s best content as determined by Medium’s algorithms and editors.

To write a post, click “New Story” and write directly into the platform’s minimalist text editor. Technically, you could just as easily copy an existing post into Medium’s text editor and republish it, but may risk running afoul of Google’s duplicate content rules.

Once you publish, others can comment on each section of your post. Medium’s analytics measure the following:

Views — The eyes that saw your story.

Reads — Whether or not the story was read, based on Medium’s algorithms.

These stats are available when you publish a post on Medium. However, because Medium’s algorithm is not public, we can’t judge how accurately stats related to Reads and Read Ratio are calculated.

It’s both an evolution of and a departure from blogging—and one that’s attracted attention. Medium secured a $25 million investment round led by Silicon Valley venture capital firm Greylock Partners, and participation from Google Ventures, Tim O’Reilly and Gary Vaynerchuk.

Why is Medium Important for Marketers?

Medium represents one new way to deliver quality content—without all the noise.

The platform hosts no ads, and only the (subjective) best content rises to the top. To do this, Medium uses a mix of social recommendation, human curation and algorithms that tell you how much of your post was actually read.

Medium provides an interesting set of tools for any marketer looking to become or cultivate a thought leader. It gives us a new platform on which to spread content. It also provides a set of metrics that might give us insight into how many people actually read our content. With the right post, Medium might even give one of us a viral hit.

What happens when—instead of using these platforms to drive traffic back to owned media—the platforms become the primary place where content is consumed?

How do you make your voice heard when someone else owns the megaphone—and decides when to turn it off and on?

Takeaways Medium Can Teach Us

Medium’s way forward is unclear, both as a platform and business. But the underlying dynamics of content delivery it highlights can teach marketers a few lessons:

It’s more important than ever to cultivate company thought leaders. As platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn and Medium begin to favor individual, rather than brand, voices, finding, developing and encouraging those voices within your company should be a top priority for marketers.

Marketers need to spearhead change management within their organizations. The rapidly changing content delivery ecosystem requires companies have guts, thick skins, and a willingness to experiment and fail. Marketers must explore new platforms, identify rapidly developing opportunities and encourage risk-taking. The cost of failure in these new content ecosystems is far lower than the cost of missing the opportunities they provide.

Don’t sell. Tell. Your company’s story and the stories of those who work there are crucial to success. As platforms filter out the noise, great stories are powerful weapons in the war for attention and relevance. Commit to storytelling. Commit to a powerful narrative. Commit to being exceptional. In the new ecosystem, only exceptional gets in front of the people you’re trying to reach.

Have you used Medium? If so, how do you use it? What are your thoughts on its value? Let us know in the comments.

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Mike Kaput

Mike Kaput is a senior consultant at PR 20/20 who is passionate about AI's potential to transform marketing. At PR 20/20, he creates measurable marketing results for companies using data-driven strategies, market-leading content, and scalable marketing technologies. Full bio.